Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

2020 Roger Ebert’s Film Festival canceled

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The 22nd Annual Roger Ebert’s Film Festival, co-founded and hosted by Chaz Ebert, announced today that the 2020 event has been canceled as a result of concerns about the new coronavirus.

The festival, also known as “Ebertfest,” is already on the schedule for April 14-17, 2021, at the Virginia Theatre in downtown Champaign.

The University of Illinois announced on Wednesday that all university-sponsored events with more than 50 attendees – which include the film festival – would be suspended indefinitely, effective Friday, March 13.

“I love everything about Ebertfest, as did our co-founder, my late husband Roger,” Chaz Ebert said. “The audience and our filmmakers help make our festival so special and so beautiful that it hurts to cancel it, but we must put concern for health and welfare foremost.”

The Virginia Theatre will help coordinate reimbursements to festival pass holders who can’t make the 2021 event, but organizers said they hoped audience members would hold onto their passes for next year so that the festival can return stronger than ever.

This year’s screenings were to include Francis Ford Coppola’s “The Cotton Club Encore,” the Farrelly brothers’ “There’s Something About Mary” and Ari Aster’s “Hereditary,” all previously announced.

Sponsored by the U. of I. College of Media and Chaz Ebert, the festival presents celebrated films and other cinematic works overlooked by audiences, critics or distributors.

Roger Ebert was an Urbana native, U. of I. journalism graduate and Pulitzer Prize-winning film critic for the Chicago Sun-Times who died in 2013. He co-founded the festival with his wife, Chaz, in 1999.

For additional information, visit ebertfest.com.

Read Next

Engineering Tilted image of used batteries.

Study shows new hope for commercially attractive lithium extraction from spent batteries

A new study shows that lithium — a critical element used in rechargeable batteries and susceptible to supply chain disruption — can be recovered from battery waste using an electrochemically driven recovery process. The method has been tested on commonly used types of lithium-containing batteries and demonstrates economic viability with the potential to simplify operations, minimize costs and increase the sustainability and attractiveness of the recovery process for commercial use.

Health and Medicine Research team in the lab.

Study: A cellular protein, FGD3, boosts breast cancer chemotherapy, immunotherapy

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — A naturally occurring protein that tends to be expressed at higher levels in breast cancer cells boosts the effectiveness of some anticancer agents, including doxorubicin, one of the most widely used chemotherapies, and a preclinical drug known as ErSO, researchers report. The protein, FGD3, contributes to the rupture of cancer cells disrupted […]

Arts Photo from "Anastasia: The Musical" showing the Romanov family in period costumes.

Lyric Theatre’s production of “Anastasia: The Musical” tells story of loss, survival and reinvention

CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — The Lyric Theatre’s production of “Anastasia: The Musical” is a story with romance and mystery, an appealing score and several big dance numbers. It also is a story of loss, survival and reinvention. The musical opened on Nov. 11 and will be performed Nov. 13-15 at Krannert Center for the Performing Arts. […]

Strategic Communications and Marketing News Bureau

507 E. Green St
MC-426
Champaign, IL 61820

Email: stratcom@illinois.edu

Phone (217) 333-5010